“The children get to have a one-on-one experience, practice their reading skills, and build a bond with somebody who’s different and can be a role model for them,” said Olga Baez, executive secretary in Fordham College at Lincoln Center’s residential life office and founder of the Bronx-based nonprofit StriveHigher Inc., which provides educational experiences to underserved students.
StriveHigher’s new virtual reading program matches Bronx elementary schoolers—from kindergarten to third grade—with student volunteers from Cristo Rey High School and nearby colleges, including Fordham. There are nearly 80 student-volunteer pairs in the weekly reading program, which is free for everyone involved. Around 30 Fordham undergraduates and MBA students from the Rose Hill and Lincoln Center campuses are currently “reading buddies,” said Baez.
After hearing stories about students falling behind in school during the COVID-19 pandemic, Baez said she wanted to do something to help. She saw celebrities and libraries posting videos of themselves reading books to children on Instagram and was inspired to put her own twist on the trend with her nonprofit, StriveHigher. Baez recruited students from Fordham with the help of Fordham’s Center for Community Engaged Learning, Campus Ministry, and the Gabelli School of Business. Campus Ministry also donated 50 books that were shipped to children across the Bronx.
“The kids are always excited. They’re practicing their reading, and the students help them if they can’t pronounce a word,” Baez said. “They’re building bonds with someone who’s bringing them joy.”
Seven-year-old Lily was among the first to join the program.
“I like reading buddies because I get to learn how to read and get better at reading, and I also like it because I can ask Stella any questions and I can ask her for any books,” Lily, a third grader who reads level T books, said in a phone call.
On Thursday evenings, Lily and her reading buddy, Stella Pandis, read a book to each other over Zoom. Many of the stories in Lily’s bookshelf focus on female empowerment and feature people of color, said her mother, Crystal, who often reads with Lily, along with her husband. One example is Antiracist Baby (Kokila, 2020), by National Book Award-winning author Ibram X. Kendi.
“The title itself was shocking to me because I never had books like this when I was little,” said Pandis, a senior political science student at Fordham College at Lincoln Center. “I learn when Lily reads to me, honestly.”
Brianna Vaca, a first-year sociology student at Fordham College at Lincoln Center, said she loves reading Don’t Touch My Hair! (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, 2018) with second grader Sarah Castillo.
“When I was younger, all the characters in books looked really similar. To see characters with big, frizzy hair and afros, and explaining their experience with it in children’s books—that really stood out to me,” said Vaca, who reads several books with Sarah on Tuesdays. “And [Sarah and I] both have frizzy hair.”
Sarah’s mother, Maria Castillo, said she enrolled her daughter in the program because it sounded like a great way to engage her in reading, especially since Sarah is attending school remotely.
“She was having a lot of problems with reading and comprehending … she could not tell you what the story was about,” said Maria. “But now, maybe because she’s doing it so much and having another person reading and explaining to her, now she’s getting there … I see [something in Sarah]that I’ve never seen before.”
Maria said her daughter was shy on camera at first. But now, she asks her “friend” to read an extra story at the end of every Zoom session.
“I used to never like to read,” Sarah said over the phone. “[Brianna] made me like to read.”
]]>“To this day, there are numerous incidents of children and adults being discriminated against or punished because of their natural hairstyle. We’re hoping that this event empowers individuals to embrace their natural beauty and their hair,” said Olga Baez, MC ’05, GSE ’16, executive secretary in Fordham College at Lincoln Center’s residential life office, who is co-sponsoring the event with her nonprofit StriveHigher and the Office of Multicultural Affairs.
The free event will take place on Saturday, Feb. 29, from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Bepler Commons, located in Faber Hall. It will feature food, raffles, two authors of color who will read aloud from their children’s books, several speakers who will discuss their hair and style tips, and 10 local businesses from the Bronx and Harlem that will be selling natural hair and skin products on site.
Among the books in the story time session are Don’t Touch My Hair! by Sharee Miller (Little, Brown Books, 2018) and The Girl With The Magical Curls (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018), a paperback by Evita Giron, a freelance writer whose book was inspired by her daughter. She is currently a pastoral mental health counseling student in Fordham’s Graduate School of Religion and Religious Education.
The expo speakers will reflect on their relationship with their hair and give the audience advice on how to care for their own. They include Martha Depumarejo and Kristopher Little, residence directors at Fordham College at Lincoln Center; Franchesca Ho Sang, GSE ’09, an English language arts teacher in the Bronx; and Courtney Gainous, a senior at Fordham College at Lincoln Center.
Gainous’ talk, “Let’s Get Into This: Hair School 101,” will focus on how to take care of your hair as a college student on a budget. It will include quick and easy ways to style your hair and what to do when you’re having a bad hair day, she said. But overall, the goal of her talk is to empower young women.
“I want [young girls]to know that protective styles and natural hair in general are professional and beautiful. Some girls might feel like they have to wear the straight wig or the straight, long weave in order to fit society’s standards. But the box braids and big curly hair—those are all beautiful, too,” Gainous said. “I’ve been wearing those all of my time here at Fordham, and I felt great every moment wearing them.”
Another student speaker, Christine Ibrahim Puri, FCRH ’21, the co-founder and co-president of the Caribbean and African Student Association, will be talking about how she grew to love her natural hair. When she was a young girl in a Nigerian boarding school, she said, she and her classmates were forced to shave off most of their hair. They were told their hair was too difficult to manage and distracting to boys. Some of her classmates cried, she remembered. And she added that everyone should be in charge of their own hair.
“[People should] make it completely up to themselves, and not what other people have to say. Not what is on TV, especially, or magazines,” Puri said. “Whether that is keeping your hair the way it is or blowing it out—whatever it is, it should completely be up to you and not up to society or people around you.”
The Love Your Hair Expo is free and open to the public.
]]>Administrative assistant in Fordham College at Lincoln Center’s residential life office since 2006.
“I man the front office and assist with any parent questions or concerns,” she said. “I supervise the student workers and assist the housing operations director with anything housing-related.”
“Transitioning from high school to college is an adjustment for both students and parents. A lot of parents [of first-year students]think, ‘This is my first child going to school and I just want to make sure my child has everything [he or she needs].’ So I help calm those nerves and help the parents let go a little bit. Helping parents and students navigate this transitional time is one of my favorite aspects of working in the office of residential life.”
At 8 years old, Baez immigrated to the U.S. She grew up in the Bronx, where she attended Theodore Roosevelt High School—just across the street from the Rose Hill campus.
“I’ve joked around that I didn’t want to go to Rose Hill because I didn’t want to just cross the street to go to college. A year into me being at Marymount, I find out that Fordham is purchasing Marymount. So I still graduated with a Fordham degree, even though I didn’t want to just ‘go across the street,’” she said with a laugh.
Over the next three decades, Baez became a three-time Fordham alumna. In 2005, she graduated from Marymount College with a bachelor’s degree in business. In 2016, she earned a master’s degree in counseling from the Graduate School of Education. In 2018, she received a master’s degree in nonprofit leadership through Fordham’s Center for Nonprofit Leaders. (From 2005 to 2006, Baez also worked in the Rose Hill career services office as an internship coordinator.)
In the summer of 2017, she created Strive4HigherEd: a grassroots program that provides minority students, particularly those from the Bronx, with events and activities that build financial literacy, wellness, education, and career exploration skills. Several months ago, Baez shortened her nonprofit’s name from Strive4HigherEd to StriveHigher.
“I wanted to make sure that there wasn’t just an emphasis on higher education because the idea of ‘strive’ is to expose students to different experiential and learning opportunities and life skills. I wanted to create a nonprofit that wasn’t just pushing kids to go to college. While that’s something that we do focus on, I focus more on developing the whole child,” she said. “My goal is to help children develop into well-rounded individuals who can reach their full potential. I think that everyone has a different path in life, and the main thing is just figuring out what works best for you and what makes you happy.”
This month, the nonprofit officially became a 501(c)(3) organization.
“Hopefully it will be funded through grants pretty soon,” Baez said. “But right now, it’s been a grassroots nonprofit … so just out of pocket and friends and family donating. But the support I’ve received with this nonprofit fuels me to continue the work and know that I’m on the right path.”
Baez’s program offers activities for children of all ages, ranging from pre-K to high school students. In the past, she has coordinated financial literacy workshops with Bank of America, where several children created their first savings accounts. She has brought coding classes, courtesy of Code Equal and Fordham’s office of multicultural affairs, to Bronx kids on the Rose Hill campus. And most recently, she started reading stories like “Lucía the Luchadora” and “Hair Love” to children in a local T-Mobile store—stories that often spotlight characters of color, who resemble many of the children that attend Baez’s storytime sessions.
“A lot of kids in the Bronx are not at reading level,” Baez said. “My goal is to express to parents how important it is to read to their kids and to have the kids reading and being excited about the books they’re reading.”
She also spearheads local college tours for Bronx students, including children as young as 11 years old. In the summer of 2017, Baez took a group of middle school students and their parents on a tour of Fordham College at Lincoln Center. The following month, they toured the Rose Hill campus and met the women’s basketball team.
“A lot of parents are like, well, why do we even have to think about that [now]?” Baez said. “It’s [about]exposing the kids to a campus, to a dorm room, and have them hear the words ‘studying abroad’ and know what that means … being able to have that type of vocabulary, no matter their home situation or their neighborhood.”
“[I want to create] a legacy of students building generational wealth. What matters to me the most is for kids to be able to grow up and buy a house or that car and not be in debt, travel, do all these things that are normal in other families and races … and I want them to be successful and happy. I want that to be the legacy that I leave behind.”
Follow StriveHigher on Instagram for its latest news and updates.
]]>Spearheading the donation effort was Olga Baez, an administrative assistant in Fordham College at Lincoln Center’s residential life office.
“I grew up in the Bronx … It doesn’t make sense for us not to coordinate with different nonprofits to make sure that these items are going to people in need,” said Baez. “We’re supporting the Bronx—we’re supporting different organizations that are able to help people.”
About 30 plastic bags of clothes, enough residential hall items to fill a truck, and several bags of nonperishable items were distributed to six nonprofit organizations across New York City. Lightly used mini fridges were given to high school seniors at the Urban Assembly Gateway School for Technology and the Mott Haven Educational Campus. Other donated items include kitchenware, cleaning supplies, bed linens, hangers, shoes, storage containers, mirrors, and microwaves.
In years past, students dropped off clothing donations in Goodwill bins and nonperishable snacks at the end of the academic year. But this year—the third consecutive year that Lincoln Center has hosted a student donation drive—is different.
“This year, we went a little bigger,” Baez said. “We allotted one of the student lounges [in McMahon]for all the items to be donated there. We used one of the student lounges at McKeon as well.”
Some items were shuttled via Ram Van to a homeless shelter for mothers and their children in the Bronx. Others were given to Grad Bag, an organization that gives lightly used residential hall items to incoming first-year college students from low-income households.
Bridge Haven Family Traditional Residence, a transitional shelter for families, was another recipient of the donated household items.
“The goal is for them to move into their own space,” Baez said. “That’s why a lot of the items, like the kitchenware, mirrors, and microwaves, are so useful for them.”
Emaeyak Ekanem, the executive director of Christ Disciples Int’l Ministries, Inc., a church in the Bronx that received some of the donations, said many of the people in the church’s community “don’t have access” to these household items that so many people take for granted. Fordham’s donation, he said, “helps to further our mission of providing for the needy in the community.”
]]>